Words of Jesus Christ in "Red" Other scripture verses are in "Marroon" ![]() The Absolutes of Salvation
Though it saddens me to say it, "the Doctrine which is the most clear, the most majestic, the most glorifying to the Lord in the Bible, is the same Doctrine that is spurned by many Christians and non Christians alike. This Doctrine is that of "Eternal Security" (or, as some snidely call it, "Once Saved, Always Saved"). The basis of most of the sins we commit in humanity is "pride". "I can do it myself", "I am an island", "I don't need anyone". When man is confronted with a teaching where "only God is magnified", where man's accomplishments are minimized, then this teaching automatically held up to ridicule. The same is true of Perseverance of the Saints (which we will refer to as "Eternal Security"). Eternal Security teaches that the Grace which God offers to man is founded on God's power alone. Eternal Security in no way relies on the works of man for man is enslaved to sin, unable to do any good in the sight of God. Any works which man does of his own power is sinful because "we just aren't able". Any work which man does "through the power of God" is acceptable, certain to succeed. Eternal Security is reliable because it is entirely "God powered". When we talk about "Eternal Security" we want to make it plain that the believer does "absolutely nothing" to remain in a state of salvation once he has entered in it. As Charles H. Spurgeon once wrote: "It is not man who perseveres, but God .." When we say "Eternal Security" we say it meaning that we believe that salvation is by faith in Jesus Christ "alone". The work of salvation is an "unconditional" covenant from God to the person who accepts that Gift. Salvation is secure, as secure as God's Word is pure. Preliminary Considerations And Misconceptions I had a conversation with a young man the other day on salvation. He had recently attended a Church service where the Pastor preached a "hellfire and brimstone" sermon (something sadly lacking in our pulpits today). The young man was frightened because he wasn't sure if he was going to hell or Heaven after his death. He thought that by just "acknowledging" the fact that Christ died for him was enough, that he was saved with God's guarantee of Heaven, yet the sermon made him examine his life and realize that the fruits of salvation were not evident. Eternal Security is often confused with "on the fly" salvation. Some people promote Eternal Security without repentance on the part of the believer. Be aware: such doctrine is "never taught" in Scripture. In the early Church a group of hedonists rose up from among our congregations known as the "Gnostics". The Gnostics taught that once you accepted Christ as Saviour you were "free" to return to your old sinful way of life, certain that you were Heaven bound no matter what. In other words, the Gnostics did not believe that salvation worked any lasting change in the nature of the person who was saved. I want you to understand this: Eternal Security does "not" teach that a man is saved so that he is free to seek out sin. If, after salvation, you do not experience a change in your walk (if you do not walk as a Child of God, or attempt to), a change in your desires, a change in your relationship with God, "then you were never saved in the first place". This is exactly what I told that young man. Salvation brings with it a new nature, one that wants to please God.
The true Christian will, in his walk, persevere in works that honor the Lord while seeking to minimize those that do not. This is the outward evidence of the inward change that salvation brings.
Though good works "do not save" you, nor keep you in salvation, they "are evidence" that let you know you have, indeed, been saved. Good works (or perhaps better, Godly works) are a natural by-product of Godly saving faith. They are a natural by-product of the new nature you receive at the point of salvation. If you go forward to be saved as a dog (unsaved), and return from the altar a dog (unsaved), then it is certain salvation has not occurred. "But if you go forward as a dog and return as a lamb of God, you have been saved." Conversely, true Salvation does not mean that a Christian "never sins". As long as we are in the flesh we are able to sin, and sometimes fall out of fellowship. Although salvation in Christ does bring a change in the "nature" of the believer, that change occurs only in our "nature", not in our flesh. Until we reach our glorified states in Heaven our bodies (the flesh) will retain it's weakness, it's propensity to sin. As long as we are in this sinful flesh there may be occasional acts of sin, and the possibility of falling out of fellowship with God.
The true Christian knows that, when he willfully sins (breaks the discipline of the family), God will discipline him for this act. If a professing Christian enters a state of habitual sin and "no punishment" is forthcoming, then it is certain that this "professing" Christian was not saved in the first place. As the writer of Hebrews put it, "then are ye bastards" (illegitimate children, never children of the Family), "and not sons". Any person who enters salvation (is under Eternal Security) will have a "new nature" from God. This new nature will cause the believer to have a "new relationship" with his Heavenly Father, and his Father will have a intimate relationship with him. "If you have not experienced this new relationship you had best re-examine your state of salvation: do not be deceived." Biblical Proof of Eternal Security
If Eternal Security is not Biblical, then God is "not Sovereign" in matters concerning His own Family. If this is true then it is obvious that the above text is "not" an inspired writing, and that the Bible is only a work of man, not of God. But this is "not true", for I believe the Bible to be an inspired writing of God to His Family. What is this passage telling us? The Christian is "kept in salvation by the very power" of the eternal God. How strong is our God? The foundational declarations of the Christian faith hold that our Creator is omniscient, omnipresent, omnipotent. In other words, "God is Almighty". This verse teaches that the strength of the Christian's salvation is based on the "very power and sovereignty of God". Notice that the verse says that we "are kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation". How assured is the Christian of his salvation? According to this text, the Christian will remain in salvation as long as "God is truly God". In other words, if a Christian ever loses his salvation, then we can be certain that there is indeed no Creator God, and we are all yet dead in our sins. The power of God brings the Christian to salvation "through faith". Faith is not a work of man, but something our Father enables at the point of salvation. Faith is "the means" by which God leads a person to salvation, and this faith is a gift from God to man:
It is certain and Biblical that salvation is a work of God only. In " NO " way, shape, or form is man a "partner" with God in the work. Since man is "not a partner" then there is no way that he can lose his salvation by an act of sin. The glory of the Gift of Salvation goes to God alone. Since "God is God" the work is effective and complete. Did creation cease to be creation because man fell under sin? "Absolutely not!" Does salvation cease to be salvation because the Christian falls out of fellowship? "Absolutely not!"
In the Gospel of John, Jesus paralleled the Eternal Security of the believer to the Sovereign will of God. Jesus said, "this is the Father's will that all which he hath given me I should lose nothing". It is God's "omnipotent Will" that those who are saved, in the arms of Jesus, "not be lost, but resurrected" in the latter days. What is the resurrection our Lord is talking about?
This resurrection is the "bodily resurrection of the believer" in Christ on the day of Rapture (see " The Rapture " section for more). On this day we shall be "personally" resurrected by the Lord Jesus Christ, the previously dead in Christ first, to be followed by those yet living. Whether or not you are in fellowship with Lord at the time of Rapture is not an issue, nor is it made an issue by the Scripture. As God is Sovereign, then all who are Christians shall meet Christ in the air in resurrection. Since we meet Him in Rapture, then it is "certain" that our salvation is secure in this earthly sphere. Can the Pelagian prove, through the Scripture, that man is a "partner with God" in the work of salvation? (see "Study #8" for more on the Pelagian view) According to the Gospel of John the believer is "entirely passive" in the work of salvation. Notice that in John 6 above that we were "given" to Jesus by the Father. If you give something to someone else, does the thing given "have any say so" in the exchange? No, for the thing given is entirely passive in the episode. Even though God has created men to a higher level of intelligence than the animal, and even though God has been more merciful to us than we should ever have deserved, in the end we are still God's creatures. The Creator God does not have to ask your permission to give you to the Son. To think that man has the "ability" to be a partner with most Infinite Being of all is foolish. We are not now nor will we ever be equal to God! In the Timothy passage above we see two things:
My Sheep Hear My Voice
Jesus makes several important statements in the above verses: Those who follow Jesus are "freely given" eternal life by the Son. Once a person is born again there is a "change in the nature" of that person. With that change comes a "willing desire" to follow Jesus. In other words, we want to do good works, to serve our Lord after salvation. Believing in Jesus is the act which leads to salvation, and "following" Jesus is the natural fruit of the new saved nature. Following Jesus alone does not bring a person to salvation, for Simon the sorcerer followed the Apostles (Acts 8.9-24), and yet remained lost. If you profess belief in Christ, yet show no evidence of salvation, chances are "you have not been saved". Belief is the basis which brings us to salvation, yet Godly works are the "fruit" of salvation. The fruit follows the belief, and both must be present in the Christian life. Those who are freely given eternal life by the Son are "completely secure" in their newfound possession. The text tells us that no one shall pluck these out of the Son's hand. It also tells us that "no one shall pluck us out of the Father's hand." The Greek text says " no one " not "no man" as translated in the King James Bible. What is the difference between the two? If the Greek text said "no man" then the Pelagian could argue that the text meant "no other man besides yourself" could take you out of God's hands. But instead the text actually reads "no one". By using the broader generic term Jesus makes it plain that "not you", not Satan, "no one at all" may take you out of the Father's hands. Jesus then reinforces this statement by saying, "My Father, which gave them me, is greater than all". As God is Sovereign those who are in the realm of His Grace are secure. In this text we also see how man is "passive in the work of salvation". Notice again that Jesus says "My Father, which gave them me". We were given to Christ by the Father, totally passive in the work of salvation. We may have believed in Christ, yet it was God who, through His Spirit, made it possible for us to believe. We may have accepted, yet it was God who wooed us to Grace.
We are secure in our salvation because we have received the indwelling Spirit of God. Jesus used emphatic verbs in referring to the promised Spirit: "I will, he shall", he may abide. The Holy Spirit fully indwells all who accept Christ as Saviour.
If you are a Christian you were "not given a choice" as to whether the Spirit would indwell you or not. You were "all made to drink into one Spirit". The Holy Spirit indwelt you at the point of salvation, immediately after you accepted Christ as Saviour. Looking back at our John 14 text we see that this same Spirit does not just come to visit the new believer, but "abide(s) with you for ever". How can the believer ever lose his salvation if the Spirit comes to stay? Will God cast the out of fellowship believer in hell, dragging the Spirit along with him? "Absolutely not!" Jesus promised that the Spirit would come and abide "forever", and places no conditions on His coming. Since we have the ever abiding Spirit, "we have Eternal Security in our salvation."
The believer is secure in salvation because of the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. We are "saved from wrath through him". In both of our Scriptural passages now in view the major "focus" is on Justification by Grace "alone". We are Justified by faith in Christ because of His Hypostatic Union and Atoning sacrifice at the Cross.
Among the Jews there was a yearly sacrificial atonement to God to "pay for" the sins of the people. These sacrifices never, in reality, made a lasting atonement for any sin. If they did then why was it necessary that the sacrifice be repeated every year? If the Jewish sacrifices were sufficient to atone for the sins of the tribes of Israel then why did not God forgive these sins "forever"? In true atonement God not only "forgives" the sin, but He also "forgets" it. By repeating the sacrifice of atonement every year it was evident that God, though He did forgive the sins, did not permanently wiped out the effect of the sin. The Jewish sacrifices were ineffectual and temporal because:
How do these facts apply to the believer's Eternal Security within salvation? Since Christ "not only" died but "also resurrected" from the dead to live as a substitute for us, then how in the world can the believer "sin and be cast into hell" for that sin? It is utterly impossible! God is not looking at the life of the human believer to determine whether or not he enters Heaven. God is looking at the substitutionary "life of Christ", and accepts the believer into His family on the basis of whether not you have accepted Christ as Savior. On the "basis of the sacrifice of Christ" no man who has accepted Him as Savior shall ever become lost. Logical proof for There are two logical points that "prove" the Doctrine of Eternal Security:
When a person comes to accept Christ as Savior he gives a "physical testimony" of his conversion by means of the sacrament of water baptism. If the saved - lost - saved theory is correct, then you would expect to find at least "one" passage in the Bible where a person was re-baptized because he had lost his salvation. As water baptism is "commanded by the Lord" Jesus Himself, you would expect at least one of the disciples to tell us to re-baptize a person who "returns" to fellowship after a bout with sin. The concept, neither historically or Scripturally, is contained in the Bible. From this point alone it is evident that the saved - lost - saved theory is "not Scriptural". If saved - lost - saved is Biblically correct, then there should be at least one teaching in the Bible telling us to cast a wayward member from the local Church. We are supposed to rebuke the wayward, refuse to serve them the Lord's Table, but never are we exhorted to cast them out of the Church. What is my point? If a Christian may "become" a non Christian by the action of sin, then Christ as well as the Apostles would have made it plain that this "newly lost" person should be cast from the physical body of Christ. If a person is "not" in union with Christ anymore, then he has no reason to stay in the the physical Body, the Church. Yet no where in the Scripture is such a teaching established. Logical Defense of the Doctrine of Eternal Security It is quite natural that the Pelagian, acting as Devils advocate, pull certain Scriptures out of context in order to affirm the teaching of the saved - lost - saved concept. In this section we will try to answer all objections to Eternal Security while staying within the context of each Scriptural passage. Preliminary Considerations The Greek word for sin is "Harmartia", which is defined as "an offense against God, failing to hit the mark of righteousness, a bad action or evil deed, and error of understanding or a mistake". There are many sects within Christianity that believe that if you "sin" you lose your salvation and are hell bound, but if you "make a mistake" you are "not" going to hell. They say that mistakes are justified by the Grace of God, and certainly do not carry as much weight as premeditated sin. Yet what the Bible teaches is that there is "no distinction" between a mistake and a sin. A sin is a mistake against righteousness and a mistake against righteousness is a sin. There is no difference. These same sects also teach that the Christian is no longer under the Mosaic Law, yet each make up their own laws that are used to determine whether a person is a Christian or not.
Suppose a person is able to go to Heaven on his good works. Well, let's look at a hypothetical situation. Suppose a man accepts Christ as his Savior at an early age. For twenty years this individual lives a life concentrated to the Lord. One day he needs some money for his sick and hospitalized wife. He asks all his friends for money, but all either do not have it to spare or refuse outright. The man, in desperation, steals funds from the company to provide for the needs of his wife. Will this man go to hell if this sin is left unrepentant and unpaid for? Well, if the individual was saved based on what Christ did for him "plus" what he does for Christ then he will burn in the Lake of Fire. The Scriptures teach that, if you commit the "least" of all sins, regardless of motive, then you're guilty of breaking "all the laws" of God. When this man took from the company he was guilty of, not only theft, but also murder, fornication, idolatry, etc. If the man is saved on the basis of what "Christ alone" did, then he will still be Heaven bound (though disciplined of God). The same is true of the believer who back stabs another believer, commits character murder, slips into sexual sins, or lies. "Eternal security covers all sins because of the sacrifice of Christ". Let's rid ourselves of the idea that the Christian can make "mistakes" and yet not sin in the process. There is "no difference", according to the Bible, between a mistake and a sin. "They are both the same thing."
What Paul was stating is this: if you have been "truly regenerated" through the blood of Christ, if you have been "truly cleansed" through His redemptive substitution, then why do you create man-made laws by which to live? Among the "holiness/pentecostal Churches" today there have been laws established as "Christian behavior" like:
And on, and on, and on. Paul plainly states that "these man-made laws have neither earthly nor heavenly value." The only thing they do is to pervert and cloud the true Gospel of Christ. These laws create a type of asceticism that breeds not humility, but pride. A person truely in Christ will allow God to direct him in "what to do" and "what not to do". God directs His children to avoid fornication, lying, stealing, and murder. Yet nowhere in the Bible are we told anyone will lose their salvation if they fall into any sin. In all matters the Christian is directed to live his life guided by the Spirit of God. This applies to smoking, drinking, the way we wear our clothes, or in the way we groom our bodies. Can we prove the statement, "A Christian is still a Christian, even if he sins?" There are several places in the Bible where people known as a Christians fell into sin, yet were still recognized as Christians.
Do you lose your salvation if you fall into fornication and incest? The Corinthian man was not only in fornication, but in fornication with "his father's wife". According to Paul this man was still a believer, still under Eternal Security. He specifically directed the Corinthians to commit the believer to Satan "for the destruction of the flesh, that the spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus". It is obvious from Paul's command that he still considered this person a soul under the familial care of God. Is this concept furthered by other Scriptures?
The Doctrine of Divine Discipline "demands" that there be a Doctrine of Eternal Security. God does not chastise or punish the unsaved. He only extends this Fatherly rebuke toward His children. Note the Hebrew text: "if ye be without chastisement, whereof all are partakers, then are ye bastards, and not sons." Why does God chastise the believer? Just like any earthly Father, He only uses the rod of punishment on His children when they are disobedient. If disobedience to God leads to "loss of salvation", and the unsaved are not punished, then why would God "ever" have to chastise one of His children? If you are no longer a child of God after disobedience then God would never chastise the Family, for there would be none disobedient in His family. It is a circular, and irrefutable argument. "But", the Pelagian states, "a little sin gleans only chastisement whereas a big sin brings damnation". Yet we have seen earlier in James 2.10 that a little sin "breaks the law" of God "equally" as much as the alleged "big sin" does. Stealing a dime breaks God's Law just as does murder, and murder is as evil as fornication. If the saved - lost - saved doctrine is true, then God has "unnecessarily" created the Doctrine of Divine Discipline, a principle that He will "never carry out". If you steal a dime you are eternally damned, not His son, and with no need of Divine Discipline. But if there is such a thing as Divine Discipline ( and there is ), there is such a thing as Eternal Security.
The Doctrine of the Judgment Seat of Christ also supports the Doctrine of Eternal Security. "Why?" The Bible tells us (above) that the children of God will have their works tested "by fire". Some of these works will burn, whereas others will survive the flame of spiritual judgment. God realizes the weaknesses of His children. If you try to serve God earnestly and the work is ineffectual, the work will "not necessarily" be destroyed because it failed. The success of the work does not guarantee its rewardability. Rather, the Father looks at "the heart" to determine the "intent" of the work, then rewards the believer based on his motivation. Say, for instance, you give one million dollars to the Church out of pride, without the intent of glorifying God. The gift may be effectual, it may help the Church, yet the work is not rewardable in the eyes of God. Yet if a pauper gives one cent to the Church with "the intent of glorifying God", this work will be rewarded at the Judgment Seat of Christ. What are the works that will be burned at the Judgment Seat? Works that were initiated out of pride, conceived from lust, out of greed, out from the flesh. These works have a foundation not of righteousness, but of sin. These are not done in obedience to Christ, but in a desire for worldly gain. It is evident that these erroneous works (conceived in sin) were not repented in this life, for the Bible teaches us that when God forgives a sin He "forgets it" as well.
Those who are being judged at the Throne of Christ are being judged, not for their fitness to enter Heaven, but to determine the relative righteousness of the works they did while on the earth. If their works are burned (because the foundation of the work was sin), they "do not lose their salvation". If we do not lose our salvation at the Judgment Seat of Christ (though some of our works are built on sin, and since all sins are equally repugnant to God), then there is no reason to believe sins "in this life" will cause us to be removed from Heaven. If there's truly a Judgment Seat of Christ where our works are judged, then there "must" be Eternal Security. Anything else just doesn't make sense! If you are not "certain" of your own salvation today, then now is a great time to make certain. Accept Jesus Christ alone as your Lord and Saviour. Please read "How do I get to Heaven" by clicking here! ![]() Please feel free to " E-mail " any questions, comments, and any difficulties you may have experienced using the webslave address below.
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